ladybird/Userland/Libraries/LibJS/Bytecode/ASTCodegen.cpp

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/*
* Copyright (c) 2021-2024, Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
* Copyright (c) 2021, Linus Groh <linusg@serenityos.org>
* Copyright (c) 2021, Gunnar Beutner <gbeutner@serenityos.org>
* Copyright (c) 2021, Marcin Gasperowicz <xnooga@gmail.com>
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
*/
#include <AK/Find.h>
#include <LibJS/AST.h>
#include <LibJS/Bytecode/Generator.h>
#include <LibJS/Bytecode/Instruction.h>
#include <LibJS/Bytecode/Op.h>
#include <LibJS/Bytecode/Register.h>
#include <LibJS/Bytecode/StringTable.h>
#include <LibJS/Runtime/Environment.h>
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
#include <LibJS/Runtime/ErrorTypes.h>
namespace JS {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::Operand choose_dst(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> const& preferred_dst)
{
if (preferred_dst.has_value())
return preferred_dst.value();
return Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ASTNode::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator&, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
this,
"Missing generate_bytecode()"sv,
};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ScopeNode::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
bool did_create_lexical_environment = false;
if (is<BlockStatement>(*this)) {
if (has_lexical_declarations()) {
generator.block_declaration_instantiation(*this);
did_create_lexical_environment = true;
}
} else if (is<Program>(*this)) {
// GlobalDeclarationInstantiation is handled by the C++ AO.
} else {
// FunctionDeclarationInstantiation is handled by the C++ AO.
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> last_result;
for (auto& child : children()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto result = TRY(child->generate_bytecode(generator));
if (result.has_value())
last_result = result;
if (generator.is_current_block_terminated())
break;
}
if (did_create_lexical_environment)
generator.end_variable_scope();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return last_result;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> EmptyStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator&, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ExpressionStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return m_expression->generate_bytecode(generator);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> BinaryExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
if (m_op == BinaryOp::In && is<PrivateIdentifier>(*m_lhs)) {
auto const& private_identifier = static_cast<PrivateIdentifier const&>(*m_lhs).string();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto base = TRY(m_rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::HasPrivateId>(dst, base, generator.intern_identifier(private_identifier));
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto lhs = TRY(m_lhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto rhs = TRY(m_rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
switch (m_op) {
case BinaryOp::Addition:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Add>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::Subtraction:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Sub>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::Multiplication:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mul>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::Division:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Div>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::Modulo:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mod>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::Exponentiation:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Exp>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::GreaterThan:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GreaterThan>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::GreaterThanEquals:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GreaterThanEquals>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::LessThan:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LessThan>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::LessThanEquals:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LessThanEquals>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::LooselyInequals:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LooselyInequals>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::LooselyEquals:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LooselyEquals>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::StrictlyInequals:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyInequals>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::StrictlyEquals:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
2021-06-07 19:16:04 +01:00
case BinaryOp::BitwiseAnd:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseAnd>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
2021-06-07 19:16:04 +01:00
case BinaryOp::BitwiseOr:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseOr>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
2021-06-07 19:16:04 +01:00
case BinaryOp::BitwiseXor:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseXor>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::LeftShift:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LeftShift>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::RightShift:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::RightShift>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::UnsignedRightShift:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::UnsignedRightShift>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::In:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::In>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case BinaryOp::InstanceOf:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::InstanceOf>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
default:
VERIFY_NOT_REACHED();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> LogicalExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
auto lhs = TRY(m_lhs->generate_bytecode(generator, preferred_dst)).value();
// FIXME: Only mov lhs into dst in case lhs is the value taken.
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, lhs);
// lhs
// jump op (true) end (false) rhs
// rhs
// jump always (true) end
// end
auto& rhs_block = generator.make_block();
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
switch (m_op) {
case LogicalOp::And:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
lhs,
Bytecode::Label { rhs_block },
Bytecode::Label { end_block });
break;
case LogicalOp::Or:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
lhs,
Bytecode::Label { end_block },
Bytecode::Label { rhs_block });
break;
case LogicalOp::NullishCoalescing:
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpNullish>(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
lhs,
Bytecode::Label { rhs_block },
Bytecode::Label { end_block });
break;
default:
VERIFY_NOT_REACHED();
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(rhs_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto rhs = TRY(m_rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, rhs);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> UnaryExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
if (m_op == UnaryOp::Delete)
return generator.emit_delete_reference(m_lhs);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> src;
// Typeof needs some special handling for when the LHS is an Identifier. Namely, it shouldn't throw on unresolvable references, but instead return "undefined".
if (m_op != UnaryOp::Typeof)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
src = TRY(m_lhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
switch (m_op) {
case UnaryOp::BitwiseNot:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseNot>(dst, *src);
break;
case UnaryOp::Not:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Not>(dst, *src);
break;
case UnaryOp::Plus:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::UnaryPlus>(dst, *src);
break;
case UnaryOp::Minus:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::UnaryMinus>(dst, *src);
break;
case UnaryOp::Typeof:
if (is<Identifier>(*m_lhs)) {
auto& identifier = static_cast<Identifier const&>(*m_lhs);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (!identifier.is_local()) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::TypeofVariable>(dst, generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string()));
break;
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
src = TRY(m_lhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Typeof>(dst, *src);
break;
case UnaryOp::Void:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
case UnaryOp::Delete: // Delete is implemented above.
default:
VERIFY_NOT_REACHED();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> NumericLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return generator.add_constant(Value(m_value), Bytecode::Generator::DeduplicateConstant::No);
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> BooleanLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return generator.add_constant(Value(m_value));
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> NullLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return generator.add_constant(js_null());
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> BigIntLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// 1. Return the NumericValue of NumericLiteral as defined in 12.8.3.
auto integer = [&] {
if (m_value[0] == '0' && m_value.length() >= 3)
if (m_value[1] == 'x' || m_value[1] == 'X')
return MUST(Crypto::SignedBigInteger::from_base(16, m_value.substring(2, m_value.length() - 3)));
if (m_value[1] == 'o' || m_value[1] == 'O')
return MUST(Crypto::SignedBigInteger::from_base(8, m_value.substring(2, m_value.length() - 3)));
if (m_value[1] == 'b' || m_value[1] == 'B')
return MUST(Crypto::SignedBigInteger::from_base(2, m_value.substring(2, m_value.length() - 3)));
return MUST(Crypto::SignedBigInteger::from_base(10, m_value.substring(0, m_value.length() - 1)));
}();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewBigInt>(dst, integer);
return dst;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> StringLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewString>(dst, generator.intern_string(m_value));
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> RegExpLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
auto source_index = generator.intern_string(m_pattern);
auto flags_index = generator.intern_string(m_flags);
auto regex_index = generator.intern_regex(Bytecode::ParsedRegex {
.regex = m_parsed_regex,
.pattern = m_parsed_pattern,
.flags = m_parsed_flags,
});
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewRegExp>(dst, source_index, flags_index, regex_index);
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> Identifier::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (is_local()) {
auto local = Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Operand::Type::Local, local_variable_index());
if (!generator.is_local_initialized(local_variable_index())) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfTDZ>(local);
}
return local;
}
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
if (is_global()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetGlobal>(dst, generator.intern_identifier(m_string), generator.next_global_variable_cache());
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetVariable>(dst, generator.intern_identifier(m_string), generator.next_environment_variable_cache());
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> arguments_to_array_for_call(Bytecode::Generator& generator, ReadonlySpan<CallExpression::Argument> arguments)
{
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
if (arguments.is_empty()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(dst);
return dst;
}
auto first_spread = find_if(arguments.begin(), arguments.end(), [](auto el) { return el.is_spread; });
Bytecode::Register args_start_reg { 0 };
for (auto it = arguments.begin(); it != first_spread; ++it) {
auto reg = generator.allocate_register();
if (args_start_reg.index() == 0)
args_start_reg = reg;
}
u32 i = 0;
for (auto it = arguments.begin(); it != first_spread; ++it, ++i) {
VERIFY(it->is_spread == false);
Bytecode::Register reg { args_start_reg.index() + i };
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(it->value->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(Bytecode::Operand(reg), value);
}
if (first_spread.index() != 0)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2u, dst, AK::Array { Bytecode::Operand(args_start_reg), Bytecode::Operand { Bytecode::Register { args_start_reg.index() + static_cast<u32>(first_spread.index() - 1) } } });
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(dst);
if (first_spread != arguments.end()) {
for (auto it = first_spread; it != arguments.end(); ++it) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto value = TRY(it->value->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ArrayAppend>(dst, value, it->is_spread);
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> SuperCall::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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Optional<Bytecode::Operand> arguments;
if (m_is_synthetic == IsPartOfSyntheticConstructor::Yes) {
// NOTE: This is the case where we have a fake constructor(...args) { super(...args); } which
// shouldn't call @@iterator of %Array.prototype%.
VERIFY(m_arguments.size() == 1);
VERIFY(m_arguments[0].is_spread);
auto const& argument = m_arguments[0];
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
// This generates a single argument.
arguments = MUST(argument.value->generate_bytecode(generator));
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
arguments = TRY(arguments_to_array_for_call(generator, m_arguments)).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::SuperCallWithArgumentArray>(dst, *arguments, m_is_synthetic == IsPartOfSyntheticConstructor::Yes);
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, BindingPattern const& pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode, Bytecode::Operand const& input_value, bool create_variables);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> AssignmentExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
if (m_op == AssignmentOp::Assignment) {
// AssignmentExpression : LeftHandSideExpression = AssignmentExpression
return m_lhs.visit(
// 1. If LeftHandSideExpression is neither an ObjectLiteral nor an ArrayLiteral, then
[&](NonnullRefPtr<Expression const> const& lhs) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> {
// a. Let lref be the result of evaluating LeftHandSideExpression.
// b. ReturnIfAbrupt(lref).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> base;
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> computed_property;
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> this_value;
bool lhs_is_super_expression = false;
if (is<MemberExpression>(*lhs)) {
auto& expression = static_cast<MemberExpression const&>(*lhs);
lhs_is_super_expression = is<SuperExpression>(expression.object());
if (!lhs_is_super_expression) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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base = TRY(expression.object().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
} else {
// https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-super-keyword-runtime-semantics-evaluation
// 1. Let env be GetThisEnvironment().
// 2. Let actualThis be ? env.GetThisBinding().
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
this_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ResolveThisBinding>(*this_value);
// SuperProperty : super [ Expression ]
// 3. Let propertyNameReference be ? Evaluation of Expression.
// 4. Let propertyNameValue be ? GetValue(propertyNameReference).
}
if (expression.is_computed()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
computed_property = TRY(expression.property().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
// To be continued later with PutByValue.
} else if (expression.property().is_identifier()) {
// Do nothing, this will be handled by PutById later.
} else if (expression.property().is_private_identifier()) {
// Do nothing, this will be handled by PutPrivateById later.
} else {
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
&expression,
"Unimplemented non-computed member expression"sv
};
}
if (lhs_is_super_expression) {
// 5/7. Return ? MakeSuperPropertyReference(actualThis, propertyKey, strict).
// https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-makesuperpropertyreference
// 1. Let env be GetThisEnvironment().
// 2. Assert: env.HasSuperBinding() is true.
// 3. Let baseValue be ? env.GetSuperBase().
// 4. Return the Reference Record { [[Base]]: baseValue, [[ReferencedName]]: propertyKey, [[Strict]]: strict, [[ThisValue]]: actualThis }.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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base = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ResolveSuperBase>(*base);
}
} else if (is<Identifier>(*lhs)) {
// NOTE: For Identifiers, we cannot perform GetVariable and then write into the reference it retrieves, only SetVariable can do this.
// FIXME: However, this breaks spec as we are doing variable lookup after evaluating the RHS. This is observable in an object environment, where we visibly perform HasOwnProperty and Get(@@unscopables) on the binded object.
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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(void)TRY(lhs->generate_bytecode(generator));
}
// FIXME: c. If IsAnonymousFunctionDefinition(AssignmentExpression) and IsIdentifierRef of LeftHandSideExpression are both true, then
// i. Let rval be ? NamedEvaluation of AssignmentExpression with argument lref.[[ReferencedName]].
// d. Else,
// i. Let rref be the result of evaluating AssignmentExpression.
// ii. Let rval be ? GetValue(rref).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto rval = TRY([&]() -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Bytecode::Operand> {
if (lhs->is_identifier()) {
return TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*m_rhs, generator.intern_identifier(static_cast<Identifier const&>(*lhs).string()))).value();
} else {
return TRY(m_rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}
}());
// e. Perform ? PutValue(lref, rval).
if (is<Identifier>(*lhs)) {
auto& identifier = static_cast<Identifier const&>(*lhs);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit_set_variable(identifier, rval);
} else if (is<MemberExpression>(*lhs)) {
auto& expression = static_cast<MemberExpression const&>(*lhs);
if (expression.is_computed()) {
if (!lhs_is_super_expression)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutByValue>(*base, *computed_property, rval);
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutByValueWithThis>(*base, *computed_property, *this_value, rval);
} else if (expression.property().is_identifier()) {
auto identifier_table_ref = generator.intern_identifier(verify_cast<Identifier>(expression.property()).string());
if (!lhs_is_super_expression)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutById>(*base, identifier_table_ref, rval, Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::KeyValue, generator.next_property_lookup_cache());
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutByIdWithThis>(*base, *this_value, identifier_table_ref, rval, Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::KeyValue, generator.next_property_lookup_cache());
} else if (expression.property().is_private_identifier()) {
auto identifier_table_ref = generator.intern_identifier(verify_cast<PrivateIdentifier>(expression.property()).string());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutPrivateById>(*base, identifier_table_ref, rval);
} else {
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
&expression,
"Unimplemented non-computed member expression"sv
};
}
} else {
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
lhs,
"Unimplemented/invalid node used a reference"sv
};
}
// f. Return rval.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return rval;
},
// 2. Let assignmentPattern be the AssignmentPattern that is covered by LeftHandSideExpression.
[&](NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const> const& pattern) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> {
// 3. Let rref be the result of evaluating AssignmentExpression.
// 4. Let rval be ? GetValue(rref).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto rval = TRY(m_rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
// 5. Perform ? DestructuringAssignmentEvaluation of assignmentPattern with argument rval.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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TRY(generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Set, rval, false));
// 6. Return rval.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return rval;
});
}
VERIFY(m_lhs.has<NonnullRefPtr<Expression const>>());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto& lhs_expression = m_lhs.get<NonnullRefPtr<Expression const>>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto reference_operands = TRY(generator.emit_load_from_reference(lhs_expression));
auto lhs = reference_operands.loaded_value.value();
Bytecode::BasicBlock* rhs_block_ptr { nullptr };
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::BasicBlock* lhs_block_ptr { nullptr };
Bytecode::BasicBlock* end_block_ptr { nullptr };
// Logical assignments short circuit.
if (m_op == AssignmentOp::AndAssignment) { // &&=
rhs_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
lhs_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
end_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
lhs,
Bytecode::Label { *rhs_block_ptr },
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::Label { *lhs_block_ptr });
} else if (m_op == AssignmentOp::OrAssignment) { // ||=
rhs_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
lhs_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
end_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
lhs,
Bytecode::Label { *lhs_block_ptr },
Bytecode::Label { *rhs_block_ptr });
} else if (m_op == AssignmentOp::NullishAssignment) { // ??=
rhs_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
lhs_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
end_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpNullish>(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
lhs,
Bytecode::Label { *rhs_block_ptr },
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::Label { *lhs_block_ptr });
}
if (rhs_block_ptr)
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*rhs_block_ptr);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto rhs = TRY([&]() -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Bytecode::Operand> {
if (lhs_expression->is_identifier()) {
return TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*m_rhs, generator.intern_identifier(static_cast<Identifier const&>(*lhs_expression).string()))).value();
}
return TRY(m_rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
switch (m_op) {
case AssignmentOp::AdditionAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Add>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::SubtractionAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Sub>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::MultiplicationAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mul>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::DivisionAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Div>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::ModuloAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mod>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::ExponentiationAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Exp>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::BitwiseAndAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseAnd>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::BitwiseOrAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseOr>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::BitwiseXorAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::BitwiseXor>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::LeftShiftAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LeftShift>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::RightShiftAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::RightShift>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::UnsignedRightShiftAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::UnsignedRightShift>(dst, lhs, rhs);
break;
case AssignmentOp::AndAssignment:
case AssignmentOp::OrAssignment:
case AssignmentOp::NullishAssignment:
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, rhs);
break;
default:
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
this,
"Unimplemented operation"sv,
};
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (lhs_expression->is_identifier())
generator.emit_set_variable(static_cast<Identifier const&>(*lhs_expression), dst);
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
(void)TRY(generator.emit_store_to_reference(reference_operands, dst));
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (rhs_block_ptr) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *end_block_ptr });
}
if (lhs_block_ptr) {
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*lhs_block_ptr);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, lhs);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *end_block_ptr });
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
}
if (end_block_ptr) {
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*end_block_ptr);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
// 14.13.3 Runtime Semantics: Evaluation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-labelled-statements-runtime-semantics-evaluation
// LabelledStatement : LabelIdentifier : LabelledItem
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> LabelledStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// Return ? LabelledEvaluation of this LabelledStatement with argument « ».
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
// 14.13.4 Runtime Semantics: LabelledEvaluation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-runtime-semantics-labelledevaluation
// LabelledStatement : LabelIdentifier : LabelledItem
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> LabelledStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// Convert the m_labelled_item NNRP to a reference early so we don't have to do it every single time we want to use it.
auto const& labelled_item = *m_labelled_item;
// 1. Let label be the StringValue of LabelIdentifier.
// NOTE: Not necessary, this is m_label.
// 2. Let newLabelSet be the list-concatenation of labelSet and « label ».
// FIXME: Avoid copy here.
auto new_label_set = label_set;
new_label_set.append(m_label);
// 3. Let stmtResult be LabelledEvaluation of LabelledItem with argument newLabelSet.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> stmt_result;
if (is<IterationStatement>(labelled_item)) {
auto const& iteration_statement = static_cast<IterationStatement const&>(labelled_item);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
stmt_result = TRY(iteration_statement.generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, new_label_set));
} else if (is<SwitchStatement>(labelled_item)) {
auto const& switch_statement = static_cast<SwitchStatement const&>(labelled_item);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
stmt_result = TRY(switch_statement.generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, new_label_set));
} else if (is<LabelledStatement>(labelled_item)) {
auto const& labelled_statement = static_cast<LabelledStatement const&>(labelled_item);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
stmt_result = TRY(labelled_statement.generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, new_label_set));
} else {
auto& labelled_break_block = generator.make_block();
// NOTE: We do not need a continuable scope as `continue;` is not allowed outside of iteration statements, throwing a SyntaxError in the parser.
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { labelled_break_block }, new_label_set);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
stmt_result = TRY(labelled_item.generate_bytecode(generator));
generator.end_breakable_scope();
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { labelled_break_block });
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(labelled_break_block);
}
// 4. If stmtResult.[[Type]] is break and SameValue(stmtResult.[[Target]], label) is true, then
// a. Set stmtResult to NormalCompletion(stmtResult.[[Value]]).
// NOTE: These steps are performed by making labelled break jump straight to the appropriate break block, which preserves the statement result's value in the accumulator.
// 5. Return Completion(stmtResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return stmt_result;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> IterationStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator&, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const&, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
this,
"Missing generate_labelled_evaluation()"sv,
};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> WhileStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> WhileStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// test
// jump if_false (true) end (false) body
// body
// jump always (true) test
// end
auto& test_block = generator.make_block();
auto& body_block = generator.make_block();
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(result, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { test_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(test_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto test = TRY(m_test->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
test,
Bytecode::Label { body_block },
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(body_block);
generator.begin_continuable_scope(Bytecode::Label { test_block }, label_set);
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { end_block }, label_set);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto body = TRY(m_body->generate_bytecode(generator));
generator.end_breakable_scope();
generator.end_continuable_scope();
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (body.has_value())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(result, body.value());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { test_block });
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return result;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> DoWhileStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> DoWhileStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// jump always (true) body
// test
// jump if_false (true) end (false) body
// body
// jump always (true) test
// end
auto& test_block = generator.make_block();
auto& body_block = generator.make_block();
auto& load_result_and_jump_to_end_block = generator.make_block();
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto completion_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(completion_value, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
// jump to the body block
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { body_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(test_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto test = TRY(m_test->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
test,
Bytecode::Label { body_block },
Bytecode::Label { load_result_and_jump_to_end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(body_block);
generator.begin_continuable_scope(Bytecode::Label { test_block }, label_set);
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { end_block }, label_set);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto body_result = TRY(m_body->generate_bytecode(generator));
generator.end_breakable_scope();
generator.end_continuable_scope();
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (body_result.has_value())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(completion_value, body_result.value());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { test_block });
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(load_result_and_jump_to_end_block);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return completion_value;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// init
// jump always (true) test
// test
// jump if_true (true) body (false) end
// body
// jump always (true) update
// update
// jump always (true) test
// end
// If 'test' is missing, fuse the 'test' and 'body' basic blocks
// If 'update' is missing, fuse the 'body' and 'update' basic blocks
Bytecode::BasicBlock* test_block_ptr { nullptr };
Bytecode::BasicBlock* body_block_ptr { nullptr };
Bytecode::BasicBlock* update_block_ptr { nullptr };
Bytecode::BasicBlock* load_result_and_jump_to_end_block_ptr { nullptr };
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
bool has_lexical_environment = false;
if (m_init) {
if (m_init->is_variable_declaration()) {
auto& variable_declaration = verify_cast<VariableDeclaration>(*m_init);
auto has_non_local_variables = false;
MUST(variable_declaration.for_each_bound_identifier([&](auto const& identifier) {
if (!identifier.is_local())
has_non_local_variables = true;
}));
if (variable_declaration.is_lexical_declaration() && has_non_local_variables) {
has_lexical_environment = true;
// FIXME: Is Block correct?
generator.begin_variable_scope();
bool is_const = variable_declaration.is_constant_declaration();
// NOTE: Nothing in the callback throws an exception.
MUST(variable_declaration.for_each_bound_identifier([&](auto const& identifier) {
if (identifier.is_local())
return;
auto index = generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(index, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, is_const);
}));
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
(void)TRY(m_init->generate_bytecode(generator));
}
body_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
if (m_test)
test_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
else
test_block_ptr = body_block_ptr;
if (m_update)
update_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
else
update_block_ptr = body_block_ptr;
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *test_block_ptr });
if (m_test) {
load_result_and_jump_to_end_block_ptr = &generator.make_block();
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*test_block_ptr);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto test = TRY(m_test->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
test,
Bytecode::Label { *body_block_ptr },
Bytecode::Label { *load_result_and_jump_to_end_block_ptr });
}
if (m_update) {
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*update_block_ptr);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
(void)TRY(m_update->generate_bytecode(generator));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *test_block_ptr });
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*body_block_ptr);
generator.begin_continuable_scope(Bytecode::Label { m_update ? *update_block_ptr : *test_block_ptr }, label_set);
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { end_block }, label_set);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto body_result = TRY(m_body->generate_bytecode(generator));
generator.end_breakable_scope();
generator.end_continuable_scope();
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
if (m_update) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *update_block_ptr });
} else {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *test_block_ptr });
}
}
if (load_result_and_jump_to_end_block_ptr) {
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*load_result_and_jump_to_end_block_ptr);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
if (has_lexical_environment)
generator.end_variable_scope();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return body_result;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ObjectExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
auto object = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewObject>(object);
if (m_properties.is_empty())
return object;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.push_home_object(object);
for (auto& property : m_properties) {
Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind property_kind;
switch (property->type()) {
case ObjectProperty::Type::KeyValue:
property_kind = Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::DirectKeyValue;
break;
case ObjectProperty::Type::Getter:
property_kind = Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Getter;
break;
case ObjectProperty::Type::Setter:
property_kind = Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Setter;
break;
case ObjectProperty::Type::Spread:
property_kind = Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Spread;
break;
case ObjectProperty::Type::ProtoSetter:
property_kind = Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::ProtoSetter;
break;
}
if (is<StringLiteral>(property->key())) {
auto& string_literal = static_cast<StringLiteral const&>(property->key());
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex key_name = generator.intern_identifier(string_literal.value());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> value;
if (property_kind == Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::ProtoSetter) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
value = TRY(property->value().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
} else if (property_kind != Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Spread) {
ByteString identifier = string_literal.value();
if (property_kind == Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Getter)
identifier = ByteString::formatted("get {}", identifier);
else if (property_kind == Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Setter)
identifier = ByteString::formatted("set {}", identifier);
auto name = generator.intern_identifier(identifier);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(property->value(), name)).value();
} else {
// Spread the key.
value = TRY(property->key().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutById>(object, key_name, *value, property_kind, generator.next_property_lookup_cache());
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto property_name = TRY(property->key().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> value;
if (property_kind != Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::Spread)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
value = TRY(property->value().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
else
value = property_name;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutByValue>(object, property_name, *value, property_kind);
}
}
generator.pop_home_object();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return object;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ArrayExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
if (m_elements.is_empty()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(dst);
return dst;
}
if (all_of(m_elements, [](auto element) { return !element || is<PrimitiveLiteral>(*element); })) {
// If all elements are constant primitives, we can just emit a single instruction to initialize the array,
// instead of emitting instructions to manually evaluate them one-by-one
auto values = MUST(FixedArray<Value>::create(m_elements.size()));
for (auto i = 0u; i < m_elements.size(); ++i) {
if (!m_elements[i])
continue;
values[i] = static_cast<PrimitiveLiteral const&>(*m_elements[i]).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewPrimitiveArray>(dst, move(values));
return dst;
}
auto first_spread = find_if(m_elements.begin(), m_elements.end(), [](auto el) { return el && is<SpreadExpression>(*el); });
Bytecode::Register args_start_reg { 0 };
for (auto it = m_elements.begin(); it != first_spread; ++it) {
auto reg = generator.allocate_register();
if (args_start_reg.index() == 0)
args_start_reg = reg;
}
u32 i = 0;
for (auto it = m_elements.begin(); it != first_spread; ++it, ++i) {
Bytecode::Register reg { args_start_reg.index() + i };
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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if (*it) {
auto value = TRY((*it)->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(Bytecode::Operand(reg), value);
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
if (first_spread.index() != 0) {
auto reg = Bytecode::Register { args_start_reg.index() + static_cast<u32>(first_spread.index() - 1) };
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2u, dst, AK::Array { Bytecode::Operand(args_start_reg), Bytecode::Operand(reg) });
} else {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(dst);
}
if (first_spread != m_elements.end()) {
for (auto it = first_spread; it != m_elements.end(); ++it) {
if (!*it) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ArrayAppend>(dst, generator.add_constant(Value()), false);
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY((*it)->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ArrayAppend>(dst, value, *it && is<SpreadExpression>(**it));
}
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> MemberExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto reference = TRY(generator.emit_load_from_reference(*this, preferred_dst));
return reference.loaded_value;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> FunctionDeclaration::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
if (m_is_hoisted) {
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
auto index = generator.intern_identifier(name());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetVariable>(value, index, generator.next_environment_variable_cache());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::SetVariable>(index, value, generator.next_environment_variable_cache(), Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Set, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Var);
}
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> FunctionExpression::generate_bytecode_with_lhs_name(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex> lhs_name, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
bool has_name = !name().is_empty();
Optional<Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex> name_identifier;
if (has_name) {
generator.begin_variable_scope();
name_identifier = generator.intern_identifier(name());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(*name_identifier, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, true);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto new_function = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit_new_function(new_function, *this, lhs_name);
if (has_name) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::SetVariable>(*name_identifier, new_function, generator.next_environment_variable_cache(), Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical);
generator.end_variable_scope();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return new_function;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> FunctionExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return generate_bytecode_with_lhs_name(generator, {}, preferred_dst);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> generate_object_binding_pattern_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, BindingPattern const& pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode initialization_mode, Bytecode::Operand const& object, bool create_variables)
{
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfNullish>(object);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Vector<Bytecode::Operand> excluded_property_names;
auto has_rest = false;
if (pattern.entries.size() > 0)
has_rest = pattern.entries[pattern.entries.size() - 1].is_rest;
for (auto& [name, alias, initializer, is_rest] : pattern.entries) {
if (is_rest) {
VERIFY(!initializer);
if (name.has<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
auto identifier = name.get<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>();
auto interned_identifier = generator.intern_identifier(identifier->string());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto copy = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::CopyObjectExcludingProperties>(
excluded_property_names.size(), copy, object, excluded_property_names);
if (create_variables) {
VERIFY(!identifier->is_local());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(interned_identifier, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_set_variable(*identifier, copy, initialization_mode);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return {};
}
if (alias.has<NonnullRefPtr<MemberExpression const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto copy = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::CopyObjectExcludingProperties>(
excluded_property_names.size(), copy, object, excluded_property_names);
(void)TRY(generator.emit_store_to_reference(alias.get<NonnullRefPtr<MemberExpression const>>(), object));
return {};
}
VERIFY_NOT_REACHED();
}
Bytecode::StringTableIndex name_index;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
if (name.has<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
auto identifier = name.get<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()->string();
name_index = generator.intern_string(identifier);
if (has_rest) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto excluded_name = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
excluded_property_names.append(excluded_name);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewString>(excluded_name, name_index);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_get_by_id(value, object, generator.intern_identifier(identifier));
} else {
auto expression = name.get<NonnullRefPtr<Expression const>>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto property_name = TRY(expression->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
if (has_rest) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto excluded_name = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
excluded_property_names.append(excluded_name);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(excluded_name, property_name);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetByValue>(value, object, property_name);
}
if (initializer) {
auto& if_undefined_block = generator.make_block();
auto& if_not_undefined_block = generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpUndefined>(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
value,
Bytecode::Label { if_undefined_block },
Bytecode::Label { if_not_undefined_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(if_undefined_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> default_value;
if (auto const* alias_identifier = alias.get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
default_value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*initializer, generator.intern_identifier((*alias_identifier)->string()))).value();
} else if (auto const* lhs = name.get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
default_value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*initializer, generator.intern_identifier((*lhs)->string()))).value();
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
default_value = TRY(initializer->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(value, *default_value);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { if_not_undefined_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(if_not_undefined_block);
}
if (alias.has<NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>>()) {
auto& binding_pattern = *alias.get<NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto nested_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(nested_value, value);
TRY(generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, binding_pattern, initialization_mode, nested_value, create_variables));
} else if (alias.has<Empty>()) {
if (name.has<NonnullRefPtr<Expression const>>()) {
// This needs some sort of SetVariableByValue opcode, as it's a runtime binding
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
name.get<NonnullRefPtr<Expression const>>().ptr(),
"Unimplemented name/alias pair: Empty/Expression"sv,
};
}
auto const& identifier = *name.get<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>();
auto identifier_ref = generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string());
if (create_variables)
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(identifier_ref, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_set_variable(identifier, value, initialization_mode);
} else if (alias.has<NonnullRefPtr<MemberExpression const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(generator.emit_store_to_reference(alias.get<NonnullRefPtr<MemberExpression const>>(), value));
} else {
auto const& identifier = *alias.get<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>();
auto identifier_ref = generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string());
if (create_variables)
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(identifier_ref, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_set_variable(identifier, value, initialization_mode);
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return {};
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> generate_array_binding_pattern_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, BindingPattern const& pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode initialization_mode, Bytecode::Operand const& input_array, bool create_variables, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst = {})
{
/*
* Consider the following destructuring assignment:
*
* let [a, b, c, d, e] = o;
*
* It would be fairly trivial to just loop through this iterator, getting the value
* at each step and assigning them to the binding sequentially. However, this is not
* correct: once an iterator is exhausted, it must not be called again. This complicates
* the bytecode. In order to accomplish this, we do the following:
*
* - Reserve a special boolean register which holds 'true' if the iterator is exhausted,
* and false otherwise
* - When we are retrieving the value which should be bound, we first check this register.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
* If it is 'true', we load undefined. Otherwise, we grab the next value from the iterator.
*
* Note that the is_exhausted register does not need to be loaded with false because the
* first IteratorNext bytecode is _not_ proceeded by an exhausted check, as it is
* unnecessary.
*/
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto is_iterator_exhausted = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(is_iterator_exhausted, generator.add_constant(Value(false)));
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto iterator = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetIterator>(iterator, input_array);
bool first = true;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto assign_value_to_alias = [&](auto& alias, Bytecode::Operand value) {
return alias.visit(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](Empty) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
// This element is an elision
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const> const& identifier) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
auto interned_index = generator.intern_identifier(identifier->string());
if (create_variables)
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(interned_index, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_set_variable(*identifier, value, initialization_mode);
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const> const& pattern) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
return generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, pattern, initialization_mode, value, create_variables);
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](NonnullRefPtr<MemberExpression const> const& expr) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
(void)generator.emit_store_to_reference(*expr, value);
return {};
});
};
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto temp_iterator_result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
for (auto& [name, alias, initializer, is_rest] : pattern.entries) {
VERIFY(name.has<Empty>());
if (is_rest) {
VERIFY(!initializer);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
if (first) {
// The iterator has not been called, and is thus known to be not exhausted
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::IteratorToArray>(value, iterator);
} else {
auto& if_exhausted_block = generator.make_block();
auto& if_not_exhausted_block = generator.make_block();
auto& continuation_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
is_iterator_exhausted,
Bytecode::Label { if_exhausted_block },
Bytecode::Label { if_not_exhausted_block });
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.switch_to_basic_block(if_exhausted_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(value);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { continuation_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(if_not_exhausted_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::IteratorToArray>(value, iterator);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { continuation_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(continuation_block);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return assign_value_to_alias(alias, value);
}
auto& iterator_is_exhausted_block = generator.make_block();
if (!first) {
auto& iterator_is_not_exhausted_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
is_iterator_exhausted,
Bytecode::Label { iterator_is_exhausted_block },
Bytecode::Label { iterator_is_not_exhausted_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(iterator_is_not_exhausted_block);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::IteratorNext>(temp_iterator_result, iterator);
generator.emit_iterator_complete(is_iterator_exhausted, temp_iterator_result);
// We still have to check for exhaustion here. If the iterator is exhausted,
// we need to bail before trying to get the value
auto& no_bail_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
is_iterator_exhausted,
Bytecode::Label { iterator_is_exhausted_block },
Bytecode::Label { no_bail_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(no_bail_block);
// Get the next value in the iterator
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = Bytecode::Operand { generator.allocate_register() };
generator.emit_iterator_value(value, temp_iterator_result);
auto& create_binding_block = generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { create_binding_block });
// The iterator is exhausted, so we just load undefined and continue binding
generator.switch_to_basic_block(iterator_is_exhausted_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(value, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { create_binding_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(create_binding_block);
if (initializer) {
auto& value_is_undefined_block = generator.make_block();
auto& value_is_not_undefined_block = generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpUndefined>(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
value,
Bytecode::Label { value_is_undefined_block },
Bytecode::Label { value_is_not_undefined_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(value_is_undefined_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> default_value;
if (auto const* alias_identifier = alias.get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
default_value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*initializer, generator.intern_identifier((*alias_identifier)->string()))).value();
} else if (auto const* name_identifier = name.get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
default_value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*initializer, generator.intern_identifier((*name_identifier)->string()))).value();
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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default_value = TRY(initializer->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(value, *default_value);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { value_is_not_undefined_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(value_is_not_undefined_block);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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TRY(assign_value_to_alias(alias, value));
first = false;
}
auto& done_block = generator.make_block();
auto& not_done_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
is_iterator_exhausted,
Bytecode::Label { done_block },
Bytecode::Label { not_done_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(not_done_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::IteratorClose>(iterator, Completion::Type::Normal, Optional<Value> {});
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { done_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(done_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return {};
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, BindingPattern const& pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode initialization_mode, Bytecode::Operand const& input_value, bool create_variables)
{
if (pattern.kind == BindingPattern::Kind::Object)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return generate_object_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, pattern, initialization_mode, input_value, create_variables);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return generate_array_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, pattern, initialization_mode, input_value, create_variables);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> assign_value_to_variable_declarator(Bytecode::Generator& generator, VariableDeclarator const& declarator, VariableDeclaration const& declaration, Bytecode::Operand value)
{
auto initialization_mode = declaration.is_lexical_declaration() ? Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize : Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Set;
return declarator.target().visit(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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[&](NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const> const& id) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
generator.emit_set_variable(*id, value, initialization_mode);
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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[&](NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const> const& pattern) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
return generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, pattern, initialization_mode, value, false);
});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> VariableDeclaration::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
for (auto& declarator : m_declarations) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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Optional<Bytecode::Operand> init_dst;
if (auto const* identifier = declarator->target().get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
if ((*identifier)->is_local()) {
init_dst = Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Operand::Type::Local, (*identifier)->local_variable_index());
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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}
if (declarator->init()) {
auto value = TRY([&]() -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Bytecode::Operand> {
if (auto const* lhs = declarator->target().get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
return TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*declarator->init(), generator.intern_identifier((*lhs)->string()), init_dst)).value();
} else {
return TRY(declarator->init()->generate_bytecode(generator, init_dst)).value();
}
}());
(void)TRY(assign_value_to_variable_declarator(generator, declarator, *this, value));
} else if (m_declaration_kind != DeclarationKind::Var) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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(void)TRY(assign_value_to_variable_declarator(generator, declarator, *this, generator.add_constant(js_undefined())));
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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for (auto& declarator : m_declarations) {
if (auto const* identifier = declarator->target().get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>()) {
if ((*identifier)->is_local()) {
generator.set_local_initialized((*identifier)->local_variable_index());
}
}
}
// NOTE: VariableDeclaration doesn't return a completion value.
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
struct BaseAndValue {
Bytecode::Operand base;
Bytecode::Operand value;
};
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<BaseAndValue> get_base_and_value_from_member_expression(Bytecode::Generator& generator, MemberExpression const& member_expression)
{
// https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-super-keyword-runtime-semantics-evaluation
if (is<SuperExpression>(member_expression.object())) {
// 1. Let env be GetThisEnvironment().
// 2. Let actualThis be ? env.GetThisBinding().
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto this_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ResolveThisBinding>(this_value);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> computed_property;
if (member_expression.is_computed()) {
// SuperProperty : super [ Expression ]
// 3. Let propertyNameReference be ? Evaluation of Expression.
// 4. Let propertyNameValue be ? GetValue(propertyNameReference).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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computed_property = TRY(member_expression.property().generate_bytecode(generator));
}
// 5/7. Return ? MakeSuperPropertyReference(actualThis, propertyKey, strict).
// https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-makesuperpropertyreference
// 1. Let env be GetThisEnvironment().
// 2. Assert: env.HasSuperBinding() is true.
// 3. Let baseValue be ? env.GetSuperBase().
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto super_base = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ResolveSuperBase>(super_base);
auto value = Bytecode::Operand { generator.allocate_register() };
// 4. Return the Reference Record { [[Base]]: baseValue, [[ReferencedName]]: propertyKey, [[Strict]]: strict, [[ThisValue]]: actualThis }.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (computed_property.has_value()) {
// 5. Let propertyKey be ? ToPropertyKey(propertyNameValue).
// FIXME: This does ToPropertyKey out of order, which is observable by Symbol.toPrimitive!
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetByValueWithThis>(value, super_base, *computed_property, this_value);
} else {
// 3. Let propertyKey be StringValue of IdentifierName.
auto identifier_table_ref = generator.intern_identifier(verify_cast<Identifier>(member_expression.property()).string());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_get_by_id_with_this(value, super_base, identifier_table_ref, this_value);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return BaseAndValue { this_value, value };
}
auto base = TRY(member_expression.object().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto value = Bytecode::Operand { generator.allocate_register() };
if (member_expression.is_computed()) {
auto property = TRY(member_expression.property().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetByValue>(value, base, property);
} else if (is<PrivateIdentifier>(member_expression.property())) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetPrivateById>(
value,
base,
generator.intern_identifier(verify_cast<PrivateIdentifier>(member_expression.property()).string()));
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_get_by_id(value, base, generator.intern_identifier(verify_cast<Identifier>(member_expression.property()).string()));
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return BaseAndValue { base, value };
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> generate_optional_chain(Bytecode::Generator& generator, OptionalChain const& optional_chain, Bytecode::Operand current_value, Bytecode::Operand current_base, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst = {});
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> CallExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
Optional<Bytecode::Builtin> builtin;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> original_callee;
auto this_value = generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
if (is<NewExpression>(this)) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
original_callee = TRY(m_callee->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
} else if (is<MemberExpression>(*m_callee)) {
2022-04-01 20:58:27 +03:00
auto& member_expression = static_cast<MemberExpression const&>(*m_callee);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto base_and_value = TRY(get_base_and_value_from_member_expression(generator, member_expression));
original_callee = base_and_value.value;
this_value = base_and_value.base;
builtin = Bytecode::get_builtin(member_expression);
} else if (is<OptionalChain>(*m_callee)) {
auto& optional_chain = static_cast<OptionalChain const&>(*m_callee);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
original_callee = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
this_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
TRY(generate_optional_chain(generator, optional_chain, *original_callee, this_value));
} else if (is<Identifier>(*m_callee)) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
// If the original_callee is an identifier, we may need to extract a `this` value.
// This is important when we're inside a `with` statement and calling a method on
// the environment's binding object.
// NOTE: If the identifier refers to a known "local" or "global", we know it can't be
// a `with` binding, so we can skip this.
auto& identifier = static_cast<Identifier const&>(*m_callee);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (identifier.is_local()) {
auto local = Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Operand::Type::Local, identifier.local_variable_index());
if (!generator.is_local_initialized(local.index())) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfTDZ>(local);
}
original_callee = local;
} else if (identifier.is_global()) {
original_callee = m_callee->generate_bytecode(generator).value();
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
original_callee = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
this_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetCalleeAndThisFromEnvironment>(
*original_callee,
this_value,
generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string()),
generator.next_environment_variable_cache());
}
} else {
// FIXME: this = global object in sloppy mode.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
original_callee = TRY(m_callee->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
// NOTE: We copy the callee to a new register to avoid overwriting it while evaluating arguments.
auto callee = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(callee, *original_callee);
Bytecode::Op::CallType call_type;
if (is<NewExpression>(*this)) {
call_type = Bytecode::Op::CallType::Construct;
} else if (m_callee->is_identifier() && static_cast<Identifier const&>(*m_callee).string() == "eval"sv) {
call_type = Bytecode::Op::CallType::DirectEval;
} else {
call_type = Bytecode::Op::CallType::Call;
}
Optional<Bytecode::StringTableIndex> expression_string_index;
if (auto expression_string = this->expression_string(); expression_string.has_value())
expression_string_index = generator.intern_string(expression_string.release_value());
bool has_spread = any_of(arguments(), [](auto& argument) { return argument.is_spread; });
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
if (has_spread) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto arguments = TRY(arguments_to_array_for_call(generator, this->arguments())).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CallWithArgumentArray>(call_type, dst, callee, this_value, arguments, expression_string_index);
} else {
Vector<Bytecode::Operand> argument_operands;
for (auto const& argument : arguments()) {
argument_operands.append(TRY(argument.value->generate_bytecode(generator)).value());
}
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::Call>(
argument_operands.size(),
call_type,
dst,
callee,
this_value,
argument_operands,
expression_string_index,
builtin);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::Operand generate_await(
Bytecode::Generator& generator,
Bytecode::Operand argument,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_type,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_value,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex type_identifier,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex value_identifier);
// https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-return-statement-runtime-semantics-evaluation
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ReturnStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand>) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> return_value;
if (m_argument) {
// ReturnStatement : return Expression ;
// 1. Let exprRef be ? Evaluation of Expression.
// 2. Let exprValue be ? GetValue(exprRef).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return_value = TRY(m_argument->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
// 3. If GetGeneratorKind() is async, set exprValue to ? Await(exprValue).
// Spec Issue?: The spec doesn't seem to do implicit await on explicit return for async functions, but does for
// async generators. However, the major engines do so, and this is observable via constructor lookups
// on Promise objects and custom thenables.
// See: https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-asyncblockstart
// c. Assert: If we return here, the async function either threw an exception or performed an implicit or explicit return; all awaiting is done.
if (generator.is_in_async_function()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received_completion = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_type = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto type_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("type");
auto value_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("value");
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return_value = generate_await(generator, *return_value, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
}
// 4. Return Completion Record { [[Type]]: return, [[Value]]: exprValue, [[Target]]: empty }.
} else {
// ReturnStatement : return ;
// 1. Return Completion Record { [[Type]]: return, [[Value]]: undefined, [[Target]]: empty }.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return_value = generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
}
if (generator.is_in_generator_or_async_function()) {
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Yield>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Yield>(nullptr, *return_value);
} else {
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Return>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Return>(return_value);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return return_value;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static void get_received_completion_type_and_value(
Bytecode::Generator& generator,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_type,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_value,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex type_identifier,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex value_identifier)
{
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_get_by_id(received_completion_type, received_completion, type_identifier);
generator.emit_get_by_id(received_completion_value, received_completion, value_identifier);
}
enum class AwaitBeforeYield {
No,
Yes,
};
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static void generate_yield(Bytecode::Generator& generator,
Bytecode::Label continuation_label,
Bytecode::Operand argument,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_type,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_value,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex type_identifier,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex value_identifier,
AwaitBeforeYield await_before_yield)
{
if (!generator.is_in_async_generator_function()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Yield>(Bytecode::Label { continuation_label }, argument);
return;
}
if (await_before_yield == AwaitBeforeYield::Yes)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
argument = generate_await(generator, argument, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
auto& unwrap_yield_resumption_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Yield>(Bytecode::Label { unwrap_yield_resumption_block }, argument);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(unwrap_yield_resumption_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion, Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Register(0)));
get_received_completion_type_and_value(generator, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
// 27.6.3.7 AsyncGeneratorUnwrapYieldResumption ( resumptionValue ), https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-asyncgeneratorunwrapyieldresumption
// 1. If resumptionValue.[[Type]] is not return, return ? resumptionValue.
auto& resumption_value_type_is_return_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto resumption_value_type_is_not_return_result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyInequals>(
resumption_value_type_is_not_return_result,
received_completion_type,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Return))));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
resumption_value_type_is_not_return_result,
Bytecode::Label { continuation_label },
Bytecode::Label { resumption_value_type_is_return_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(resumption_value_type_is_return_block);
// 2. Let awaited be Completion(Await(resumptionValue.[[Value]])).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generate_await(generator, received_completion_value, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
// 3. If awaited.[[Type]] is throw, return ? awaited.
auto& awaited_type_is_normal_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto awaited_type_is_throw_result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(
awaited_type_is_throw_result,
received_completion_type,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Throw))));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
awaited_type_is_throw_result,
Bytecode::Label { continuation_label },
Bytecode::Label { awaited_type_is_normal_block });
// 4. Assert: awaited.[[Type]] is normal.
generator.switch_to_basic_block(awaited_type_is_normal_block);
// 5. Return Completion Record { [[Type]]: return, [[Value]]: awaited.[[Value]], [[Target]]: empty }.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutById>(
received_completion,
type_identifier,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Return))),
Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::KeyValue,
generator.next_property_lookup_cache());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(continuation_label);
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> YieldExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
VERIFY(generator.is_in_generator_function());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received_completion = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_type = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto type_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("type");
auto value_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("value");
if (m_is_yield_from) {
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// 15.5.5 Runtime Semantics: Evaluation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-generator-function-definitions-runtime-semantics-evaluation
// 1. Let generatorKind be GetGeneratorKind().
// NOTE: is_in_async_generator_function differentiates the generator kind.
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// 2. Let exprRef be ? Evaluation of AssignmentExpression.
// 3. Let value be ? GetValue(exprRef).
VERIFY(m_argument);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto value = TRY(m_argument->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
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// 4. Let iteratorRecord be ? GetIterator(value, generatorKind).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto iterator_record = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto iterator_hint = generator.is_in_async_generator_function() ? IteratorHint::Async : IteratorHint::Sync;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetIterator>(iterator_record, value, iterator_hint);
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// 5. Let iterator be iteratorRecord.[[Iterator]].
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto iterator = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetObjectFromIteratorRecord>(iterator, iterator_record);
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// Cache iteratorRecord.[[NextMethod]] for use in step 7.a.i.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto next_method = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetNextMethodFromIteratorRecord>(next_method, iterator_record);
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// 6. Let received be NormalCompletion(undefined).
// See get_received_completion_type_and_value above.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion_type, generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Normal))));
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LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion_value, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
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// 7. Repeat,
auto& loop_block = generator.make_block();
auto& continuation_block = generator.make_block();
auto& loop_end_block = generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { loop_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(loop_block);
// a. If received.[[Type]] is normal, then
auto& type_is_normal_block = generator.make_block();
auto& is_type_throw_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received_completion_type_register_is_normal = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(
received_completion_type_register_is_normal,
received_completion_type,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Normal))));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
received_completion_type_register_is_normal,
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Bytecode::Label { type_is_normal_block },
Bytecode::Label { is_type_throw_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_normal_block);
// i. Let innerResult be ? Call(iteratorRecord.[[NextMethod]], iteratorRecord.[[Iterator]], « received.[[Value]] »).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto array = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2u, array, AK::Array { received_completion_value, received_completion_value });
auto inner_result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CallWithArgumentArray>(Bytecode::Op::CallType::Call, inner_result, next_method, iterator, array);
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// ii. If generatorKind is async, set innerResult to ? Await(innerResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (generator.is_in_async_generator_function()) {
auto new_inner_result = generate_await(generator, inner_result, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(inner_result, new_inner_result);
}
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// iii. If innerResult is not an Object, throw a TypeError exception.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfNotObject>(inner_result);
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// iv. Let done be ? IteratorComplete(innerResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto done = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_complete(done, inner_result);
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// v. If done is true, then
auto& type_is_normal_done_block = generator.make_block();
auto& type_is_normal_not_done_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
done,
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Bytecode::Label { type_is_normal_done_block },
Bytecode::Label { type_is_normal_not_done_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_normal_done_block);
// 1. Return ? IteratorValue(innerResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto return_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_value(return_value, inner_result);
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { loop_end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_normal_not_done_block);
// vi. If generatorKind is async, set received to Completion(AsyncGeneratorYield(? IteratorValue(innerResult))).
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// vii. Else, set received to Completion(GeneratorYield(innerResult)).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
{
// FIXME: Yield currently only accepts a Value, not an object conforming to the IteratorResult interface, so we have to do an observable lookup of `value` here.
// This only matters for non-async generators.
auto current_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_value(current_value, inner_result);
generate_yield(generator,
Bytecode::Label { continuation_block },
current_value,
received_completion,
received_completion_type,
received_completion_value,
type_identifier,
value_identifier,
AwaitBeforeYield::No);
}
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// b. Else if received.[[Type]] is throw, then
generator.switch_to_basic_block(is_type_throw_block);
auto& type_is_throw_block = generator.make_block();
auto& type_is_return_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto received_completion_type_register_is_throw = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(
received_completion_type_register_is_throw,
Bytecode::Operand(received_completion_type),
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Throw))));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
received_completion_type_register_is_throw,
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Bytecode::Label { type_is_throw_block },
Bytecode::Label { type_is_return_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_throw_block);
// i. Let throw be ? GetMethod(iterator, "throw").
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto throw_method = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetMethod>(throw_method, iterator, generator.intern_identifier("throw"));
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// ii. If throw is not undefined, then
auto& throw_method_is_defined_block = generator.make_block();
auto& throw_method_is_undefined_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpUndefined>(
throw_method,
Bytecode::Label { throw_method_is_undefined_block },
Bytecode::Label { throw_method_is_defined_block });
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
generator.switch_to_basic_block(throw_method_is_defined_block);
// 1. Let innerResult be ? Call(throw, iterator, « received.[[Value]] »).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto received_value_array = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2u, received_value_array, AK::Array { received_completion_value, received_completion_value });
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CallWithArgumentArray>(Bytecode::Op::CallType::Call, inner_result, throw_method, iterator, received_value_array);
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// 2. If generatorKind is async, set innerResult to ? Await(innerResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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if (generator.is_in_async_generator_function()) {
auto new_result = generate_await(generator, inner_result, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(inner_result, new_result);
}
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// 3. NOTE: Exceptions from the inner iterator throw method are propagated. Normal completions from an inner throw method are processed similarly to an inner next.
// 4. If innerResult is not an Object, throw a TypeError exception.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfNotObject>(inner_result);
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// 5. Let done be ? IteratorComplete(innerResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit_iterator_complete(done, inner_result);
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// 6. If done is true, then
auto& type_is_throw_done_block = generator.make_block();
auto& type_is_throw_not_done_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
done,
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
Bytecode::Label { type_is_throw_done_block },
Bytecode::Label { type_is_throw_not_done_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_throw_done_block);
// a. Return ? IteratorValue(innerResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_iterator_value(return_value, inner_result);
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { loop_end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_throw_not_done_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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{
// 7. If generatorKind is async, set received to Completion(AsyncGeneratorYield(? IteratorValue(innerResult))).
// 8. Else, set received to Completion(GeneratorYield(innerResult)).
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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// FIXME: Yield currently only accepts a Value, not an object conforming to the IteratorResult interface, so we have to do an observable lookup of `value` here.
// This only matters for non-async generators.
auto yield_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_value(yield_value, inner_result);
generate_yield(generator, Bytecode::Label { continuation_block }, yield_value, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier, AwaitBeforeYield::No);
}
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generator.switch_to_basic_block(throw_method_is_undefined_block);
// 1. NOTE: If iterator does not have a throw method, this throw is going to terminate the yield* loop. But first we need to give iterator a chance to clean up.
// 2. Let closeCompletion be Completion Record { [[Type]]: normal, [[Value]]: empty, [[Target]]: empty }.
// 3. If generatorKind is async, perform ? AsyncIteratorClose(iteratorRecord, closeCompletion).
if (generator.is_in_async_generator_function()) {
// FIXME: This performs `await` outside of the generator!
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::AsyncIteratorClose>(iterator_record, Completion::Type::Normal, Optional<Value> {});
}
// 4. Else, perform ? IteratorClose(iteratorRecord, closeCompletion).
else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::IteratorClose>(iterator_record, Completion::Type::Normal, Optional<Value> {});
}
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
// 5. NOTE: The next step throws a TypeError to indicate that there was a yield* protocol violation: iterator does not have a throw method.
// 6. Throw a TypeError exception.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto exception = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewTypeError>(exception, generator.intern_string(ErrorType::YieldFromIteratorMissingThrowMethod.message()));
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Throw>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Throw>(exception);
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// c. Else,
// i. Assert: received.[[Type]] is return.
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_return_block);
// ii. Let return be ? GetMethod(iterator, "return").
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto return_method = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetMethod>(return_method, iterator, generator.intern_identifier("return"));
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// iii. If return is undefined, then
auto& return_is_undefined_block = generator.make_block();
auto& return_is_defined_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpUndefined>(
return_method,
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Bytecode::Label { return_is_undefined_block },
Bytecode::Label { return_is_defined_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(return_is_undefined_block);
// 1. If generatorKind is async, set received.[[Value]] to ? Await(received.[[Value]]).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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if (generator.is_in_async_generator_function()) {
generate_await(generator, received_completion_value, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
}
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// 2. Return ? received.
// NOTE: This will always be a return completion.
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Yield>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Yield>(nullptr, received_completion_value);
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generator.switch_to_basic_block(return_is_defined_block);
// iv. Let innerReturnResult be ? Call(return, iterator, « received.[[Value]] »).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto call_array = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2, call_array, AK::Array { received_completion_value, received_completion_value });
auto inner_return_result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CallWithArgumentArray>(Bytecode::Op::CallType::Call, inner_return_result, return_method, iterator, call_array);
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// v. If generatorKind is async, set innerReturnResult to ? Await(innerReturnResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (generator.is_in_async_generator_function()) {
auto new_value = generate_await(generator, inner_return_result, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(inner_return_result, new_value);
}
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// vi. If innerReturnResult is not an Object, throw a TypeError exception.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfNotObject>(inner_return_result);
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// vii. Let done be ? IteratorComplete(innerReturnResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit_iterator_complete(done, inner_return_result);
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
// viii. If done is true, then
auto& type_is_return_done_block = generator.make_block();
auto& type_is_return_not_done_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
done,
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Bytecode::Label { type_is_return_done_block },
Bytecode::Label { type_is_return_not_done_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_return_done_block);
// 1. Let value be ? IteratorValue(innerReturnResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto inner_return_result_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_value(inner_return_result_value, inner_return_result);
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// 2. Return Completion Record { [[Type]]: return, [[Value]]: value, [[Target]]: empty }.
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Yield>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Yield>(nullptr, inner_return_result_value);
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generator.switch_to_basic_block(type_is_return_not_done_block);
// ix. If generatorKind is async, set received to Completion(AsyncGeneratorYield(? IteratorValue(innerReturnResult))).
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
// x. Else, set received to Completion(GeneratorYield(innerReturnResult)).
// FIXME: Yield currently only accepts a Value, not an object conforming to the IteratorResult interface, so we have to do an observable lookup of `value` here.
// This only matters for non-async generators.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_value(received, inner_return_result);
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generate_yield(generator, Bytecode::Label { continuation_block }, received, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier, AwaitBeforeYield::No);
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generator.switch_to_basic_block(continuation_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion, Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Register(0)));
get_received_completion_type_and_value(generator, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
2022-12-09 18:48:57 +00:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { loop_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(loop_end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return return_value;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> argument;
if (m_argument)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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argument = TRY(m_argument->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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argument = generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
auto& continuation_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generate_yield(generator, Bytecode::Label { continuation_block }, *argument, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier, AwaitBeforeYield::Yes);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(continuation_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion, Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Register(0)));
get_received_completion_type_and_value(generator, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
auto& normal_completion_continuation_block = generator.make_block();
auto& throw_completion_continuation_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received_completion_type_is_normal = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(
received_completion_type_is_normal,
received_completion_type,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Normal))));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
received_completion_type_is_normal,
Bytecode::Label { normal_completion_continuation_block },
Bytecode::Label { throw_completion_continuation_block });
auto& throw_value_block = generator.make_block();
auto& return_value_block = generator.make_block();
generator.switch_to_basic_block(throw_completion_continuation_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto received_completion_type_is_throw = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(
received_completion_type_is_throw,
received_completion_type,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Throw))));
// If type is not equal to "throw" or "normal", assume it's "return".
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
received_completion_type_is_throw,
Bytecode::Label { throw_value_block },
Bytecode::Label { return_value_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(throw_value_block);
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Throw>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Throw>(received_completion_value);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(return_value_block);
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Yield>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Yield>(nullptr, received_completion_value);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(normal_completion_continuation_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return received_completion_value;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> IfStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// test
// jump if_true (true) true (false) false
// true
// jump always (true) end
// false
// jump always (true) end
// end
auto& true_block = generator.make_block();
auto& false_block = generator.make_block();
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
auto predicate = TRY(m_predicate->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
predicate,
Bytecode::Label { true_block },
Bytecode::Label { false_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(true_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto consequent = TRY(m_consequent->generate_bytecode(generator, dst));
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (consequent.has_value())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, *consequent);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(false_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> alternate;
if (m_alternate) {
alternate = TRY(m_alternate->generate_bytecode(generator, dst));
}
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
if (alternate.has_value())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, *alternate);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ContinueStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// FIXME: Handle finally blocks in a graceful manner
// We need to execute the finally block, but tell it to resume
// execution at the designated block
if (m_target_label.is_null()) {
generator.generate_continue();
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
generator.generate_continue(m_target_label);
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> DebuggerStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator&, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ConditionalExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// test
// jump if_true (true) true (false) false
// true
// jump always (true) end
// false
// jump always (true) end
// end
auto& true_block = generator.make_block();
auto& false_block = generator.make_block();
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto test = TRY(m_test->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
test,
Bytecode::Label { true_block },
Bytecode::Label { false_block });
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(true_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto consequent = TRY(m_consequent->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, consequent);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(false_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto alternate = TRY(m_alternate->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, alternate);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> SequenceExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> last_value;
for (auto& expression : m_expressions) {
last_value = TRY(expression->generate_bytecode(generator));
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return last_value;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> TemplateLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
for (size_t i = 0; i < m_expressions.size(); i++) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(m_expressions[i]->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
if (i == 0) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, value);
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ConcatString>(dst, value);
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> TaggedTemplateLiteral::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto tag = TRY(m_tag->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
// FIXME: We only need to record the first and last register,
// due to packing everything in an array, same goes for argument_regs
// FIXME: Follow
// 13.2.8.3 GetTemplateObject ( templateLiteral ), https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-gettemplateobject
// more closely, namely:
// * cache this somehow
// * add a raw object accessor
// * freeze array and raw member
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Vector<Bytecode::Operand> string_regs;
auto& expressions = m_template_literal->expressions();
for (size_t i = 0; i < expressions.size(); ++i) {
if (i % 2 != 0)
continue;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
string_regs.append(Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register()));
}
size_t reg_index = 0;
for (size_t i = 0; i < expressions.size(); ++i) {
if (i % 2 != 0)
continue;
// NOTE: If the string contains invalid escapes we get a null expression here,
// which we then convert to the expected `undefined` TV. See
// 12.9.6.1 Static Semantics: TV, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-static-semantics-tv
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto string_reg = Bytecode::Operand(string_regs[reg_index++]);
if (is<NullLiteral>(expressions[i])) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(string_reg, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
} else {
auto value = TRY(expressions[i]->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(string_reg, value);
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto strings_array = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
if (string_regs.is_empty()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(strings_array);
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2u, strings_array, AK::Array { string_regs.first(), string_regs.last() });
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Vector<Bytecode::Operand> argument_regs;
argument_regs.append(strings_array);
for (size_t i = 1; i < expressions.size(); i += 2)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
argument_regs.append(Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register()));
for (size_t i = 1; i < expressions.size(); i += 2) {
auto string_reg = argument_regs[1 + i / 2];
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto string = TRY(expressions[i]->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(string_reg, string);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Vector<Bytecode::Operand> raw_string_regs;
for ([[maybe_unused]] auto& raw_string : m_template_literal->raw_strings())
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
string_regs.append(Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register()));
reg_index = 0;
for (auto& raw_string : m_template_literal->raw_strings()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(raw_string->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto raw_string_reg = string_regs[reg_index++];
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(raw_string_reg, value);
raw_string_regs.append(raw_string_reg);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto raw_strings_array = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
if (raw_string_regs.is_empty()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(raw_strings_array);
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2u, raw_strings_array, AK::Array { raw_string_regs.first(), raw_string_regs.last() });
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PutById>(strings_array, generator.intern_identifier("raw"), raw_strings_array, Bytecode::Op::PropertyKind::KeyValue, generator.next_property_lookup_cache());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto arguments = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
if (!argument_regs.is_empty())
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_with_extra_operand_slots<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(2, arguments, AK::Array { argument_regs.first(), argument_regs.last() });
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewArray>(arguments);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CallWithArgumentArray>(Bytecode::Op::CallType::Call, dst, tag, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()), arguments);
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> UpdateExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand>) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto reference = TRY(generator.emit_load_from_reference(*m_argument));
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> previous_value_for_postfix;
if (m_op == UpdateOp::Increment) {
if (m_prefixed) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Increment>(*reference.loaded_value);
} else {
previous_value_for_postfix = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PostfixIncrement>(*previous_value_for_postfix, *reference.loaded_value);
}
} else {
if (m_prefixed) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Decrement>(*reference.loaded_value);
} else {
previous_value_for_postfix = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::PostfixDecrement>(*previous_value_for_postfix, *reference.loaded_value);
}
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (is<Identifier>(*m_argument))
(void)TRY(generator.emit_store_to_reference(static_cast<Identifier const&>(*m_argument), *reference.loaded_value));
else
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
(void)TRY(generator.emit_store_to_reference(reference, *reference.loaded_value));
if (!m_prefixed)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return *previous_value_for_postfix;
return *reference.loaded_value;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ThrowStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto argument = TRY(m_argument->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Throw>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Throw>(argument);
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> BreakStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// FIXME: Handle finally blocks in a graceful manner
// We need to execute the finally block, but tell it to resume
// execution at the designated block
if (m_target_label.is_null()) {
generator.generate_break();
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
generator.generate_break(m_target_label);
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> TryStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
auto& saved_block = generator.current_block();
Optional<Bytecode::Label> handler_target;
Optional<Bytecode::Label> finalizer_target;
Optional<Bytecode::Generator::UnwindContext> unwind_context;
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
Bytecode::BasicBlock* next_block { nullptr };
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> dst;
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
if (m_finalizer) {
// FIXME: See notes in Op.h->ScheduleJump
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
auto& finalizer_block = generator.make_block();
generator.switch_to_basic_block(finalizer_block);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LeaveUnwindContext>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
(void)TRY(m_finalizer->generate_bytecode(generator));
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
next_block = &generator.make_block();
auto next_target = Bytecode::Label { *next_block };
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ContinuePendingUnwind>(next_target);
}
finalizer_target = Bytecode::Label { finalizer_block };
generator.start_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::ReturnToFinally);
unwind_context.emplace(generator, finalizer_target);
}
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
if (m_handler) {
auto& handler_block = generator.make_block();
generator.switch_to_basic_block(handler_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto caught_value = Bytecode::Operand { generator.allocate_register() };
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Catch>(caught_value);
if (!m_finalizer)
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LeaveUnwindContext>();
// OPTIMIZATION: We avoid creating a lexical environment if the catch clause has no parameter.
bool did_create_variable_scope_for_catch_clause = false;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(m_handler->parameter().visit(
[&](DeprecatedFlyString const& parameter) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
if (!parameter.is_empty()) {
generator.begin_variable_scope();
did_create_variable_scope_for_catch_clause = true;
auto parameter_identifier = generator.intern_identifier(parameter);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(parameter_identifier, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::SetVariable>(parameter_identifier, caught_value, generator.next_environment_variable_cache(), Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const> const& binding_pattern) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
generator.begin_variable_scope();
did_create_variable_scope_for_catch_clause = true;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, *binding_pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize, caught_value, true));
return {};
}));
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto handler_result = TRY(m_handler->body().generate_bytecode(generator));
if (handler_result.has_value() && !generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
dst = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(*dst, *handler_result);
}
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
handler_target = Bytecode::Label { handler_block };
if (did_create_variable_scope_for_catch_clause)
generator.end_variable_scope();
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
if (m_finalizer) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(*finalizer_target);
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
} else {
VERIFY(!next_block);
VERIFY(!unwind_context.has_value());
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
next_block = &generator.make_block();
auto next_target = Bytecode::Label { *next_block };
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(next_target);
}
}
}
if (m_finalizer)
generator.end_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::ReturnToFinally);
if (m_handler) {
if (!m_finalizer)
unwind_context.emplace(generator, OptionalNone());
unwind_context->set_handler(handler_target.value());
}
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
auto& target_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
generator.switch_to_basic_block(saved_block);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::EnterUnwindContext>(Bytecode::Label { target_block });
generator.start_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::Unwind);
if (m_finalizer)
generator.start_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::ReturnToFinally);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(target_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto block_result = TRY(m_block->generate_bytecode(generator));
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (block_result.has_value()) {
dst = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(*dst, *block_result);
}
if (m_finalizer) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(*finalizer_target);
} else {
VERIFY(unwind_context.has_value());
unwind_context.clear();
if (!next_block)
next_block = &generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LeaveUnwindContext>();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *next_block });
}
}
if (m_finalizer)
generator.end_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::ReturnToFinally);
generator.end_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::Unwind);
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
generator.switch_to_basic_block(next_block ? *next_block : saved_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (!dst.has_value())
return generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
return dst;
LibJS: Implement bytecode generation for try..catch..finally EnterUnwindContext pushes an unwind context (exception handler and/or finalizer) onto a stack. LeaveUnwindContext pops the unwind context from that stack. Upon return to the interpreter loop we check whether the VM has an exception pending. If no unwind context is available we return from the loop. If an exception handler is available we clear the VM's exception, put the exception value into the accumulator register, clear the unwind context's handler and jump to the handler. If no handler is available but a finalizer is available we save the exception value + metadata (for later use by ContinuePendingUnwind), clear the VM's exception, pop the unwind context and jump to the finalizer. ContinuePendingUnwind checks whether a saved exception is available. If no saved exception is available it jumps to the resume label. Otherwise it stores the exception into the VM. The Jump after LeaveUnwindContext could be integrated into the LeaveUnwindContext instruction. I've kept them separate for now to make the bytecode more readable. > try { 1; throw "x" } catch (e) { 2 } finally { 3 }; 4 1: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] EnterUnwindContext handler:@4 finalizer:@3 [ 38] EnterScope [ 48] LoadImmediate 1 [ 60] NewString 1 ("x") [ 70] Throw <for non-terminated blocks: insert LeaveUnwindContext + Jump @3 here> 2: [ 0] LoadImmediate 4 3: [ 0] EnterScope [ 10] LoadImmediate 3 [ 28] ContinuePendingUnwind resume:@2 4: [ 0] SetVariable 0 (e) [ 10] EnterScope [ 20] LoadImmediate 2 [ 38] LeaveUnwindContext [ 3c] Jump @3 String Table: 0: e 1: x
2021-06-10 15:04:38 +02:00
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> SwitchStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> SwitchStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto discriminant = TRY(m_discriminant->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
Vector<Bytecode::BasicBlock&> case_blocks;
Bytecode::BasicBlock* entry_block_for_default { nullptr };
Bytecode::BasicBlock* next_test_block = &generator.make_block();
auto has_lexical_declarations = this->has_lexical_declarations();
if (has_lexical_declarations)
generator.block_declaration_instantiation(*this);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *next_test_block });
for (auto& switch_case : m_cases) {
auto& case_block = generator.make_block();
auto& case_entry_block = generator.make_block();
if (switch_case->test()) {
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*next_test_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto test_value = TRY(switch_case->test()->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(result, test_value, discriminant);
next_test_block = &generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
result,
Bytecode::Label { case_entry_block },
Bytecode::Label { *next_test_block });
} else {
entry_block_for_default = &case_entry_block;
}
// Initialize the completion value of the switch statement to empty. We can't do this in the case's basic block directly,
// as we must not clobber the possible non-empty completion value of the previous case when falling through.
generator.switch_to_basic_block(case_entry_block);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { case_block });
case_blocks.append(case_block);
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*next_test_block);
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
if (entry_block_for_default != nullptr) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *entry_block_for_default });
} else {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
}
auto current_block = case_blocks.begin();
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { end_block }, label_set);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
for (auto& switch_case : m_cases) {
generator.switch_to_basic_block(*current_block);
for (auto& statement : switch_case->children()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto result = TRY(statement->generate_bytecode(generator));
if (generator.is_current_block_terminated())
break;
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (result.has_value())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, *result);
else
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(dst, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
}
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
auto next_block = current_block;
next_block++;
if (next_block.is_end()) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
} else {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { *next_block });
}
}
current_block++;
}
generator.end_breakable_scope();
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
if (has_lexical_declarations)
generator.end_variable_scope();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> SuperExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator&, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
// The semantics for SuperExpression are handled in CallExpression and SuperCall.
VERIFY_NOT_REACHED();
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ClassDeclaration::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(m_class_expression->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit_set_variable(*m_class_expression.ptr()->m_name, value, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize);
// NOTE: ClassDeclaration does not produce a value.
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
// 15.7.14 Runtime Semantics: ClassDefinitionEvaluation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-runtime-semantics-classdefinitionevaluation
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ClassExpression::generate_bytecode_with_lhs_name(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex> lhs_name, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
// NOTE: Step 2 is not a part of NewClass instruction because it is assumed to be done before super class expression evaluation
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateLexicalEnvironment>();
if (has_name() || !lhs_name.has_value()) {
// NOTE: Step 3.a is not a part of NewClass instruction because it is assumed to be done before super class expression evaluation
auto interned_index = generator.intern_identifier(name());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(interned_index, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, true);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> super_class;
if (m_super_class)
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
super_class = TRY(m_super_class->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::NewClass>(dst, super_class, *this, lhs_name);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ClassExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return generate_bytecode_with_lhs_name(generator, {}, preferred_dst);
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> SpreadExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
// NOTE: All users of this should handle the behaviour of this on their own,
// assuming it returns an Array-like object
return m_target->generate_bytecode(generator);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ThisExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ResolveThisBinding>(dst);
return dst;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::Operand generate_await(
Bytecode::Generator& generator,
Bytecode::Operand argument,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_type,
Bytecode::Operand received_completion_value,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex type_identifier,
Bytecode::IdentifierTableIndex value_identifier)
{
VERIFY(generator.is_in_async_function());
auto& continuation_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Await>(Bytecode::Label { continuation_block }, argument);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(continuation_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
// FIXME: It's really magical that we can just assume that the completion value is in register 0.
// It ends up there because we "return" from the Await instruction above via the synthetic
// generator function that actually drives async execution.
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion, Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Register(0)));
get_received_completion_type_and_value(generator, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
auto& normal_completion_continuation_block = generator.make_block();
auto& throw_value_block = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received_completion_type_is_normal = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::StrictlyEquals>(
received_completion_type_is_normal,
received_completion_type,
generator.add_constant(Value(to_underlying(Completion::Type::Normal))));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
received_completion_type_is_normal,
Bytecode::Label { normal_completion_continuation_block },
Bytecode::Label { throw_value_block });
// Simplification: The only abrupt completion we receive from AsyncFunctionDriverWrapper or AsyncGenerator is Type::Throw
// So we do not need to account for the Type::Return path
generator.switch_to_basic_block(throw_value_block);
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Throw>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Throw>(received_completion_value);
generator.switch_to_basic_block(normal_completion_continuation_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return received_completion_value;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> AwaitExpression::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto argument = TRY(m_argument->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
auto received_completion = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_type = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion, Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Register(0)));
auto type_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("type");
auto value_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("value");
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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return generate_await(generator, argument, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> WithStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto object = TRY(m_object->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::EnterObjectEnvironment>(object);
// EnterObjectEnvironment sets the running execution context's lexical_environment to a new Object Environment.
generator.start_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::LeaveLexicalEnvironment);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto body_result = TRY(m_body->generate_bytecode(generator));
if (!body_result.has_value())
body_result = generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
generator.end_boundary(Bytecode::Generator::BlockBoundaryType::LeaveLexicalEnvironment);
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::LeaveLexicalEnvironment>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return body_result;
}
enum class LHSKind {
Assignment,
VarBinding,
LexicalBinding,
};
enum class IterationKind {
Enumerate,
Iterate,
AsyncIterate,
};
// 14.7.5.6 ForIn/OfHeadEvaluation ( uninitializedBoundNames, expr, iterationKind ), https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-runtime-semantics-forinofheadevaluation
struct ForInOfHeadEvaluationResult {
bool is_destructuring { false };
LHSKind lhs_kind { LHSKind::Assignment };
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> iterator;
};
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<ForInOfHeadEvaluationResult> for_in_of_head_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, IterationKind iteration_kind, Variant<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>, NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>> const& lhs, NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const> const& rhs)
{
ForInOfHeadEvaluationResult result {};
bool entered_lexical_scope = false;
if (auto* ast_ptr = lhs.get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>>(); ast_ptr && is<VariableDeclaration>(**ast_ptr)) {
// Runtime Semantics: ForInOfLoopEvaluation, for any of:
// ForInOfStatement : for ( var ForBinding in Expression ) Statement
// ForInOfStatement : for ( ForDeclaration in Expression ) Statement
// ForInOfStatement : for ( var ForBinding of AssignmentExpression ) Statement
// ForInOfStatement : for ( ForDeclaration of AssignmentExpression ) Statement
auto& variable_declaration = static_cast<VariableDeclaration const&>(**ast_ptr);
result.is_destructuring = variable_declaration.declarations().first()->target().has<NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>>();
result.lhs_kind = variable_declaration.is_lexical_declaration() ? LHSKind::LexicalBinding : LHSKind::VarBinding;
if (variable_declaration.declaration_kind() == DeclarationKind::Var) {
// B.3.5 Initializers in ForIn Statement Heads, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-initializers-in-forin-statement-heads
auto& variable = variable_declaration.declarations().first();
if (variable->init()) {
VERIFY(variable->target().has<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>());
auto identifier = variable->target().get<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>();
auto identifier_table_ref = generator.intern_identifier(identifier->string());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
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auto value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*variable->init(), identifier_table_ref)).value();
generator.emit_set_variable(*identifier, value);
}
} else {
auto has_non_local_variables = false;
MUST(variable_declaration.for_each_bound_identifier([&](auto const& identifier) {
if (!identifier.is_local())
has_non_local_variables = true;
}));
if (has_non_local_variables) {
// 1. Let oldEnv be the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment.
// NOTE: 'uninitializedBoundNames' refers to the lexical bindings (i.e. Const/Let) present in the second and last form.
// 2. If uninitializedBoundNames is not an empty List, then
entered_lexical_scope = true;
// a. Assert: uninitializedBoundNames has no duplicate entries.
// b. Let newEnv be NewDeclarativeEnvironment(oldEnv).
generator.begin_variable_scope();
// c. For each String name of uninitializedBoundNames, do
// NOTE: Nothing in the callback throws an exception.
MUST(variable_declaration.for_each_bound_identifier([&](auto const& identifier) {
if (identifier.is_local())
return;
// i. Perform ! newEnv.CreateMutableBinding(name, false).
auto interned_identifier = generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(interned_identifier, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
}));
// d. Set the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment to newEnv.
// NOTE: Done by CreateLexicalEnvironment.
}
}
} else {
// Runtime Semantics: ForInOfLoopEvaluation, for any of:
// ForInOfStatement : for ( LeftHandSideExpression in Expression ) Statement
// ForInOfStatement : for ( LeftHandSideExpression of AssignmentExpression ) Statement
result.lhs_kind = LHSKind::Assignment;
}
// 3. Let exprRef be the result of evaluating expr.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto object = TRY(rhs->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
// 4. Set the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment to oldEnv.
if (entered_lexical_scope)
generator.end_variable_scope();
// 5. Let exprValue be ? GetValue(exprRef).
// NOTE: No need to store this anywhere.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto iterator = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
// 6. If iterationKind is enumerate, then
if (iteration_kind == IterationKind::Enumerate) {
// a. If exprValue is undefined or null, then
auto& nullish_block = generator.make_block();
auto& continuation_block = generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpNullish>(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
object,
Bytecode::Label { nullish_block },
Bytecode::Label { continuation_block });
// i. Return Completion Record { [[Type]]: break, [[Value]]: empty, [[Target]]: empty }.
generator.switch_to_basic_block(nullish_block);
generator.generate_break();
generator.switch_to_basic_block(continuation_block);
// b. Let obj be ! ToObject(exprValue).
// NOTE: GetObjectPropertyIterator does this.
// c. Let iterator be EnumerateObjectProperties(obj).
// d. Let nextMethod be ! GetV(iterator, "next").
// e. Return the Iterator Record { [[Iterator]]: iterator, [[NextMethod]]: nextMethod, [[Done]]: false }.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetObjectPropertyIterator>(iterator, object);
}
// 7. Else,
else {
// a. Assert: iterationKind is iterate or async-iterate.
// b. If iterationKind is async-iterate, let iteratorKind be async.
// c. Else, let iteratorKind be sync.
auto iterator_kind = iteration_kind == IterationKind::AsyncIterate ? IteratorHint::Async : IteratorHint::Sync;
// d. Return ? GetIterator(exprValue, iteratorKind).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetIterator>(iterator, object, iterator_kind);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
result.iterator = iterator;
return result;
}
// 14.7.5.7 ForIn/OfBodyEvaluation ( lhs, stmt, iteratorRecord, iterationKind, lhsKind, labelSet [ , iteratorKind ] ), https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-runtime-semantics-forin-div-ofbodyevaluation-lhs-stmt-iterator-lhskind-labelset
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> for_in_of_body_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, ASTNode const& node, Variant<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>, NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>> const& lhs, ASTNode const& body, ForInOfHeadEvaluationResult const& head_result, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, Bytecode::BasicBlock& loop_end, Bytecode::BasicBlock& loop_update, IteratorHint iterator_kind = IteratorHint::Sync, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst = {})
{
// 1. If iteratorKind is not present, set iteratorKind to sync.
// 2. Let oldEnv be the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment.
bool has_lexical_binding = false;
// 3. Let V be undefined.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto completion_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(completion_value, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
// 4. Let destructuring be IsDestructuring of lhs.
auto destructuring = head_result.is_destructuring;
// 5. If destructuring is true and if lhsKind is assignment, then
if (destructuring && head_result.lhs_kind == LHSKind::Assignment) {
// a. Assert: lhs is a LeftHandSideExpression.
// b. Let assignmentPattern be the AssignmentPattern that is covered by lhs.
// FIXME: Implement this.
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
&node,
"Unimplemented: assignment destructuring in for/of"sv,
};
}
// 6. Repeat,
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { loop_update });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(loop_update);
generator.begin_continuable_scope(Bytecode::Label { loop_update }, label_set);
// a. Let nextResult be ? Call(iteratorRecord.[[NextMethod]], iteratorRecord.[[Iterator]]).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto next_result = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::IteratorNext>(next_result, *head_result.iterator);
// b. If iteratorKind is async, set nextResult to ? Await(nextResult).
if (iterator_kind == IteratorHint::Async) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto received_completion = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_type = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto received_completion_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto type_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("type");
auto value_identifier = generator.intern_identifier("value");
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(received_completion, Bytecode::Operand(Bytecode::Register(0)));
auto new_result = generate_await(generator, next_result, received_completion, received_completion_type, received_completion_value, type_identifier, value_identifier);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(next_result, new_result);
}
// c. If Type(nextResult) is not Object, throw a TypeError exception.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ThrowIfNotObject>(next_result);
// d. Let done be ? IteratorComplete(nextResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto done = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_complete(done, next_result);
// e. If done is true, return V.
auto& loop_continue = generator.make_block();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpIf>(
done,
Bytecode::Label { loop_end },
Bytecode::Label { loop_continue });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(loop_continue);
// f. Let nextValue be ? IteratorValue(nextResult).
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto next_value = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
generator.emit_iterator_value(next_value, next_result);
// g. If lhsKind is either assignment or varBinding, then
if (head_result.lhs_kind != LHSKind::LexicalBinding) {
// i. If destructuring is false, then
if (!destructuring) {
// 1. Let lhsRef be the result of evaluating lhs. (It may be evaluated repeatedly.)
// NOTE: We're skipping all the completion stuff that the spec does, as the unwinding mechanism will take case of doing that.
if (head_result.lhs_kind == LHSKind::VarBinding) {
auto& declaration = static_cast<VariableDeclaration const&>(*lhs.get<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>>());
VERIFY(declaration.declarations().size() == 1);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(assign_value_to_variable_declarator(generator, declaration.declarations().first(), declaration, next_value));
} else {
if (auto ptr = lhs.get_pointer<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>>()) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(generator.emit_store_to_reference(**ptr, next_value));
} else {
auto& binding_pattern = lhs.get<NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(generator, *binding_pattern, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Set, next_value, false));
}
}
}
}
// h. Else,
else {
// i. Assert: lhsKind is lexicalBinding.
// ii. Assert: lhs is a ForDeclaration.
// iii. Let iterationEnv be NewDeclarativeEnvironment(oldEnv).
// iv. Perform ForDeclarationBindingInstantiation of lhs with argument iterationEnv.
// v. Set the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment to iterationEnv.
// 14.7.5.4 Runtime Semantics: ForDeclarationBindingInstantiation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-runtime-semantics-fordeclarationbindinginstantiation
// 1. Assert: environment is a declarative Environment Record.
// NOTE: We just made it.
auto& variable_declaration = static_cast<VariableDeclaration const&>(*lhs.get<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>>());
// 2. For each element name of the BoundNames of ForBinding, do
// NOTE: Nothing in the callback throws an exception.
auto has_non_local_variables = false;
MUST(variable_declaration.for_each_bound_identifier([&](auto const& identifier) {
if (!identifier.is_local())
has_non_local_variables = true;
}));
if (has_non_local_variables) {
generator.begin_variable_scope();
has_lexical_binding = true;
MUST(variable_declaration.for_each_bound_identifier([&](auto const& identifier) {
if (identifier.is_local())
return;
auto interned_identifier = generator.intern_identifier(identifier.string());
// a. If IsConstantDeclaration of LetOrConst is true, then
if (variable_declaration.is_constant_declaration()) {
// i. Perform ! environment.CreateImmutableBinding(name, true).
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(interned_identifier, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, true, false, true);
}
// b. Else,
else {
// i. Perform ! environment.CreateMutableBinding(name, false).
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CreateVariable>(interned_identifier, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical, false);
}
}));
// 3. Return unused.
// NOTE: No need to do that as we've inlined this.
}
// vi. If destructuring is false, then
if (!destructuring) {
// 1. Assert: lhs binds a single name.
// 2. Let lhsName be the sole element of BoundNames of lhs.
auto lhs_name = variable_declaration.declarations().first()->target().get<NonnullRefPtr<Identifier const>>();
// 3. Let lhsRef be ! ResolveBinding(lhsName).
// NOTE: We're skipping all the completion stuff that the spec does, as the unwinding mechanism will take case of doing that.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit_set_variable(*lhs_name, next_value, Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize, Bytecode::Op::EnvironmentMode::Lexical);
}
}
// i. If destructuring is false, then
if (!destructuring) {
// i. If lhsRef is an abrupt completion, then
// 1. Let status be lhsRef.
// ii. Else if lhsKind is lexicalBinding, then
// 1. Let status be Completion(InitializeReferencedBinding(lhsRef, nextValue)).
// iii. Else,
// 1. Let status be Completion(PutValue(lhsRef, nextValue)).
// NOTE: This is performed above.
}
// j. Else,
else {
// FIXME: i. If lhsKind is assignment, then
// 1. Let status be Completion(DestructuringAssignmentEvaluation of assignmentPattern with argument nextValue).
// ii. Else if lhsKind is varBinding, then
// 1. Assert: lhs is a ForBinding.
// 2. Let status be Completion(BindingInitialization of lhs with arguments nextValue and undefined).
// iii. Else,
// 1. Assert: lhsKind is lexicalBinding.
// 2. Assert: lhs is a ForDeclaration.
// 3. Let status be Completion(ForDeclarationBindingInitialization of lhs with arguments nextValue and iterationEnv).
if (head_result.lhs_kind == LHSKind::VarBinding || head_result.lhs_kind == LHSKind::LexicalBinding) {
auto& declaration = static_cast<VariableDeclaration const&>(*lhs.get<NonnullRefPtr<ASTNode const>>());
VERIFY(declaration.declarations().size() == 1);
auto& binding_pattern = declaration.declarations().first()->target().get<NonnullRefPtr<BindingPattern const>>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
(void)TRY(generate_binding_pattern_bytecode(
generator,
*binding_pattern,
head_result.lhs_kind == LHSKind::VarBinding ? Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Set : Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize,
next_value,
false));
} else {
return Bytecode::CodeGenerationError {
&node,
"Unimplemented: assignment destructuring in for/of"sv,
};
}
}
// FIXME: Implement iteration closure.
// k. If status is an abrupt completion, then
// i. Set the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment to oldEnv.
// ii. If iteratorKind is async, return ? AsyncIteratorClose(iteratorRecord, status).
// iii. If iterationKind is enumerate, then
// 1. Return ? status.
// iv. Else,
// 1. Assert: iterationKind is iterate.
// 2. Return ? IteratorClose(iteratorRecord, status).
// l. Let result be the result of evaluating stmt.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto result = TRY(body.generate_bytecode(generator));
// m. Set the running execution context's LexicalEnvironment to oldEnv.
if (has_lexical_binding)
generator.end_variable_scope();
generator.end_continuable_scope();
generator.end_breakable_scope();
// NOTE: If we're here, then the loop definitely continues.
// n. If LoopContinues(result, labelSet) is false, then
// i. If iterationKind is enumerate, then
// 1. Return ? UpdateEmpty(result, V).
// ii. Else,
// 1. Assert: iterationKind is iterate.
// 2. Set status to Completion(UpdateEmpty(result, V)).
// 3. If iteratorKind is async, return ? AsyncIteratorClose(iteratorRecord, status).
// 4. Return ? IteratorClose(iteratorRecord, status).
// o. If result.[[Value]] is not empty, set V to result.[[Value]].
// The body can contain an unconditional block terminator (e.g. return, throw), so we have to check for that before generating the Jump.
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
if (!generator.is_current_block_terminated()) {
if (result.has_value())
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(completion_value, *result);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { loop_update });
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
}
generator.switch_to_basic_block(loop_end);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return completion_value;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForInStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
// 14.7.5.5 Runtime Semantics: ForInOfLoopEvaluation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-runtime-semantics-forinofloopevaluation
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForInStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
auto& loop_end = generator.make_block();
auto& loop_update = generator.make_block();
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { loop_end }, label_set);
auto head_result = TRY(for_in_of_head_evaluation(generator, IterationKind::Enumerate, m_lhs, m_rhs));
return for_in_of_body_evaluation(generator, *this, m_lhs, body(), head_result, label_set, loop_end, loop_update);
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForOfStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForOfStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
auto& loop_end = generator.make_block();
auto& loop_update = generator.make_block();
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { loop_end }, label_set);
auto head_result = TRY(for_in_of_head_evaluation(generator, IterationKind::Iterate, m_lhs, m_rhs));
return for_in_of_body_evaluation(generator, *this, m_lhs, body(), head_result, label_set, loop_end, loop_update);
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForAwaitOfStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
return generate_labelled_evaluation(generator, {});
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ForAwaitOfStatement::generate_labelled_evaluation(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Vector<DeprecatedFlyString> const& label_set, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
auto& loop_end = generator.make_block();
auto& loop_update = generator.make_block();
generator.begin_breakable_scope(Bytecode::Label { loop_end }, label_set);
auto head_result = TRY(for_in_of_head_evaluation(generator, IterationKind::AsyncIterate, m_lhs, m_rhs));
return for_in_of_body_evaluation(generator, *this, m_lhs, m_body, head_result, label_set, loop_end, loop_update, IteratorHint::Async);
}
// 13.3.12.1 Runtime Semantics: Evaluation, https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-meta-properties-runtime-semantics-evaluation
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> MetaProperty::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
// NewTarget : new . target
if (m_type == MetaProperty::Type::NewTarget) {
// 1. Return GetNewTarget().
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetNewTarget>(dst);
return dst;
}
// ImportMeta : import . meta
if (m_type == MetaProperty::Type::ImportMeta) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetImportMeta>(dst);
return dst;
}
VERIFY_NOT_REACHED();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ClassFieldInitializerStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(*m_expression, generator.intern_identifier(m_class_field_identifier_name), preferred_dst));
generator.perform_needed_unwinds<Bytecode::Op::Return>();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Return>(value);
return value;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
static Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> generate_optional_chain(Bytecode::Generator& generator, OptionalChain const& optional_chain, Bytecode::Operand current_value, Bytecode::Operand current_base, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst)
{
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> new_current_value;
if (is<MemberExpression>(optional_chain.base())) {
auto& member_expression = static_cast<MemberExpression const&>(optional_chain.base());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto base_and_value = TRY(get_base_and_value_from_member_expression(generator, member_expression));
new_current_value = base_and_value.value;
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_base, base_and_value.base);
} else if (is<OptionalChain>(optional_chain.base())) {
auto& sub_optional_chain = static_cast<OptionalChain const&>(optional_chain.base());
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(generate_optional_chain(generator, sub_optional_chain, current_value, current_base));
new_current_value = current_value;
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
new_current_value = TRY(optional_chain.base().generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_value, *new_current_value);
auto& load_undefined_and_jump_to_end_block = generator.make_block();
auto& end_block = generator.make_block();
for (auto& reference : optional_chain.references()) {
auto is_optional = reference.visit([](auto& ref) { return ref.mode; }) == OptionalChain::Mode::Optional;
if (is_optional) {
auto& not_nullish_block = generator.make_block();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::JumpNullish>(
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
current_value,
Bytecode::Label { load_undefined_and_jump_to_end_block },
Bytecode::Label { not_nullish_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(not_nullish_block);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
TRY(reference.visit(
[&](OptionalChain::Call const& call) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
auto arguments = TRY(arguments_to_array_for_call(generator, call.arguments)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::CallWithArgumentArray>(Bytecode::Op::CallType::Call, current_value, current_value, current_base, arguments);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_base, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](OptionalChain::ComputedReference const& ref) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_base, current_value);
auto property = TRY(ref.expression->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetByValue>(current_value, current_value, property);
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](OptionalChain::MemberReference const& ref) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_base, current_value);
generator.emit_get_by_id(current_value, current_value, generator.intern_identifier(ref.identifier->string()));
return {};
},
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
[&](OptionalChain::PrivateMemberReference const& ref) -> Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<void> {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_base, current_value);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::GetPrivateById>(current_value, current_value, generator.intern_identifier(ref.private_identifier->string()));
return {};
}));
}
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(load_undefined_and_jump_to_end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_value, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Jump>(Bytecode::Label { end_block });
generator.switch_to_basic_block(end_block);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return {};
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> OptionalChain::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto current_base = Bytecode::Operand(generator.allocate_register());
auto current_value = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::Mov>(current_base, generator.add_constant(js_undefined()));
TRY(generate_optional_chain(generator, *this, current_value, current_base));
return current_value;
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ImportCall::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto specifier = TRY(m_specifier->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
Optional<Bytecode::Operand> options;
if (m_options) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
options = TRY(m_options->generate_bytecode(generator)).value();
} else {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
options = generator.add_constant(js_undefined());
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto dst = choose_dst(generator, preferred_dst);
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::ImportCall>(dst, specifier, *options);
return dst;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ExportStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator& generator, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
Bytecode::Generator::SourceLocationScope scope(generator, *this);
if (!is_default_export()) {
if (m_statement) {
return m_statement->generate_bytecode(generator);
}
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
VERIFY(m_statement);
if (is<FunctionDeclaration>(*m_statement) || is<ClassDeclaration>(*m_statement)) {
return m_statement->generate_bytecode(generator);
}
if (is<ClassExpression>(*m_statement)) {
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(static_cast<ClassExpression const&>(*m_statement), generator.intern_identifier("default"sv))).value();
if (!static_cast<ClassExpression const&>(*m_statement).has_name()) {
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::SetVariable>(
generator.intern_identifier(ExportStatement::local_name_for_default),
value,
generator.next_environment_variable_cache(),
Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize);
}
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
return value;
}
// ExportDeclaration : export default AssignmentExpression ;
VERIFY(is<Expression>(*m_statement));
LibJS/Bytecode: Move to a new bytecode format This patch moves us away from the accumulator-based bytecode format to one with explicit source and destination registers. The new format has multiple benefits: - ~25% faster on the Kraken and Octane benchmarks :^) - Fewer instructions to accomplish the same thing - Much easier for humans to read(!) Because this change requires a fundamental shift in how bytecode is generated, it is quite comprehensive. Main implementation mechanism: generate_bytecode() virtual function now takes an optional "preferred dst" operand, which allows callers to communicate when they have an operand that would be optimal for the result to go into. It also returns an optional "actual dst" operand, which is where the completion value (if any) of the AST node is stored after the node has "executed". One thing of note that's new: because instructions can now take locals as operands, this means we got rid of the GetLocal instruction. A side-effect of that is we have to think about the temporal deadzone (TDZ) a bit differently for locals (GetLocal would previously check for empty values and interpret that as a TDZ access and throw). We now insert special ThrowIfTDZ instructions in places where a local access may be in the TDZ, to maintain the correct behavior. There are a number of progressions and regressions from this test: A number of async generator tests have been accidentally fixed while converting the implementation to the new bytecode format. It didn't seem useful to preserve bugs in the original code when converting it. Some "does eval() return the correct completion value" tests have regressed, in particular ones related to propagating the appropriate completion after control flow statements like continue and break. These are all fairly obscure issues, and I believe we can continue working on them separately. The net test262 result is a progression though. :^)
2024-02-04 08:00:54 +01:00
auto value = TRY(generator.emit_named_evaluation_if_anonymous_function(static_cast<Expression const&>(*m_statement), generator.intern_identifier("default"sv))).value();
generator.emit<Bytecode::Op::SetVariable>(
generator.intern_identifier(ExportStatement::local_name_for_default),
value,
generator.next_environment_variable_cache(),
Bytecode::Op::SetVariable::InitializationMode::Initialize);
return value;
}
Bytecode::CodeGenerationErrorOr<Optional<Bytecode::Operand>> ImportStatement::generate_bytecode(Bytecode::Generator&, [[maybe_unused]] Optional<Bytecode::Operand> preferred_dst) const
{
return Optional<Bytecode::Operand> {};
}
}